back to article Asteroid-mining 'FireFlys' will be ready for action by 2015, vows space firm

A second commercial venture to mine the near infinite resources of outer space has been started, and Deep Space Industries (DSI) is promising its spacecraft and 3D printers will allow successful mining operations within a decade. The venture says that it will have its first class of 55lb (25kg) "FireFly" probes ready for …

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  1. Ragarath
    Terminator

    They have arrived!

    The process sees powdered nickel ore fed into the system, which is then formed into units of solid metal, and can also be used to make tools and replacement parts.

    Self replicating machines are here! Look out.

    Now where is my tinfoil hat?

    1. The Indomitable Gall

      Re: They have arrived!

      Are you sure that's not tinfoil, and not a sintered metal powder brain/computer interface....?

    2. James Micallef Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Re: They have arrived!

      "can also be used to make tools and replacement parts"

      That's the way to go, I like the vision even though I think the timeframe they're proposing for it is over-ambitious

    3. LarsG
      Meh

      Re: They have arrived!

      Looking for gullible investors......

      Quick way to make money

      1. Promote asteroid mining

      2. Promise short time scale get rich quick scheme

      3. Rake in the investment

      4. Buy expensive houses and cars

      5. Extend time scale ask for more investment because they are so close to starting

      6. Rake in more investments

      7. Buy more expensive cars and houses

      8. Extend timescale ask for more investment

      9. Investment dries up

      10. Go bust, retire on proceeds bought from investments

      Mandoff would be proud of you.

      1. Ian Yates
        Joke

        Re: They have arrived!

        You missed:

        2a. Name it after a much-loved cult Sci-Fi series, in order to pull in the geek crowd

        Now, where do I send my cheque?

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Death Star

      A Death Star will be necessary to protect all asteroid mining projects from alien attack.

  2. Jelliphiish
    Meh

    bubblespace

    a bunch of VC cash because space is sexy and the internet is all mined out. Where's the ROI?

    1. Code Monkey
      Thumb Up

      Re: bubblespace

      I'm tempted to play along. Coming soon "Kickstarter Mine Thee Asteroidehs" from the Code Monkey Dept of Wacky Scams.

  3. TeeCee Gold badge
    Meh

    Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

    Cheaper fuel, all well and good, but there is one question that needs to be answered.

    How many geosynchronous satellites have a refuelling capability?

    1. AdamT

      Re: Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

      Well, I guess one response is that new satellites, at least, can be given that capability. But I guess that if you have a sufficiently adaptable refuelling robot then it's just a matter of how much you need to dismantle a satellite to get to the necessary plumbing. For owners of satellites which are about to need their final boost into retirement orbit it could be worth a shot especially as, by then, DSI will have the tech to take it to retirement orbit if they break it (or there are too many spare nuts left over)

    2. Penguin
      Happy

      Re: Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

      That's a real good point about refuelling but the more I think about it the easier I bet it will be. Satellite fuel (assuming Hydrazine) is really nasty stuff, heavily toxic, highly corrosive and surprisingly unstable. My guess is that when they go up they would want to fill them on or as close to the pad as possible which I guess would require easy to access refuelling gear already in place on the bird.

      I’d be fascinated how this actually works, any satellite engineers out there care to enlighten us?

      1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
        Boffin

        Re: Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

        "really nasty stuff, heavily toxic, highly corrosive"

        True

        "surprisingly unstable"

        Incorrect. it's only unstable in the sense it makes a poor coolant for combustion chambers relative to other fuels. It replaced Hydrogen Peroxide due to its stability. HTP was stable but not relative to NTO and the Hydrazines.

        Standard loading to satellites is by sealed systems that usually have explosive valves to keep the 2 hypergolic compounds sealed from the atmosphere and separate from each other.

        Satellite refueling has been investigated since the early 80s by NASA. You also need to mfg these compounds in orbit so this is an ISRU problem as well. I've no idea how well this has been investigated.

        1. Al Jones

          Re: Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

          Once in place, the satellites only need relatively small "nudges" to maintain position, or to start moving in the direction of a new location, and then a few small nudges to slow down and stop once they get to the new location. So it should be possible to attach small, impulse devices to the outside of the satellite, with it's own small fuel tank. That's what I understood the references to the nickel fabrication in the Micro G Foundry was about - the Dragonflies would be able to build relatively simple impulse engines and fill them with fuel, which could then be attached to existing satellites.

          1. TeeCee Gold badge
            Meh

            Re: Refuelling geosynchronous satellites.

            Another elephant in this room is that if on-orbit fuel poundage cost really were a Big, Fat, Hairy Deal for satellite lifespan then mechanisms to solve that already exist. Using mercury ion thrusters rather than chemical ones is an obvious approach, run for years on a miniscule amount of reaction mass and the "fuel" is electricity from the sat's solar panels.

            I have to suspect that the lifespan is actually dictated by the MTBF of the sat's major components and the fuelling provided is what's sufficient to keep it on station for the planned life and then deorbit it. Prolonging the life with refuelling would offer no advantage as it would still be necessary to have provisioned its on-orbit replacement, as the thing could drop dead for a variety of other reasons at any moment. You might just as well cutover to the replacement, getting the most out of that's life and sunset the old bird, as is done now.

    3. David Pollard

      Re: Refuelling - a diversion tactic

      The mention of refuelling satellites is there to divert attention from one of the major flaws of this scam. It's a variant of a standard tactic in confidence tricks.

      There is no mention of how the problem is solved of providing the large quantity of fuel required during the six months that the firefly is to scoot around prospecting. There is no explanation of how the firefly could travel so far and so fast. But once the idea is planted that it can collect fuel as easily as pulling into a petrol station many people overlook the glaring problem and continue with the fantasy.

  4. LordHighFixer
    Terminator

    Didn't I read this story before

    After they ship up the mining equipment, then they ship up the autonomous self repairing computer systems to guide the robo-miners, then after a few generations of self repair they build a ship and fly off to deep space to hunt down a richer ore field leaving us behind. And giving us the robo-finger on their way out...

    1. ~mico
      Boffin

      Re: Didn't I read this story before

      Can't get much beyond asteroid belt without fusion reactors. Kuiper belt is already too cold and too dark for solar power, and I don't know how much fissionables you can find there (if any).

  5. Rustident Spaceniak
    Alien

    Nice idea, but...

    let me see a working prototype and I might believe these guys are in with a chance. I wouldn't hold my breath though, specially since they seem to expect serious investment from outside.

    Concerning the geosynchronous sats, there would be a business case in that - if such sats were designed to be refuelled in space, which they are not. They don't typically even have a handle for the fueller to hold on to. What's more I still don't see anyone creating complex nitrogen-based chemicals from asteroids that don't even contain nitrogen.

    With the orbiting solar power, who knows, it might just be workable; provided of course the aliens don't swat those fireflies first!

  6. P.Nutt
    Mushroom

    Its all fun and Games

    Until some self replicating robot figures out they can make many more copies of itself and go and start digging up the blue rock 3rd from the sun.

  7. PlacidCasual
    Happy

    On the refuelling issue I guess until satellites are built for refuelling you'd have to create a sapce tug to move them to the desired location. I assume that all satellites must still have the hard contact points used for launch still on them so wouldn't a space tug just attach there and drag em into position?

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    GeoSats - not necessary to refuel

    It's not strictly needed that a geosync sat be built to refuel in order to extend its lifespan - a "strap on" booster could be designed to work (yes, you need to be very good about getting the center of thrust to be aligned with the center of mass of the bird).

    BUT: getting from Earth surface to the surface of any near Earth object (and remaining intact when you do!) is a great deal of delta-V - and delta-V is what is expensive in space. Just getting a probe to the rock is hard. THEN, you have the extra delta-V of getting whatever was useful on the rock back to geosync orbit is even harder.

    I wish them all the success in (and out of) the world, and I would actually kick in on a Kickstarter for this (because my philosophy is to assume a Kickstarter will fail), but you can bet I wouldn't make this my only retirement investment.

    (but I would take a flier with some of my investment funds - *if* it paid off, you could be pretty well set.)

    1. Tom 7

      Re: GeoSats - not necessary to refuel

      I would have thought solar sails were perfect for keeping GeoSats where they are needed

      And as for getting fuel into space I'm sure a supergun would be the cheapest way of doing it so longs as its NIMBY

      1. Alan Brown Silver badge

        Re: GeoSats - not necessary to refuel

        So far the best supergun has been able to put about 1 kg up about 100 miles.

        As in straight up, and straight back down again. Getting to orbital/escape velocity is another matter altogether and atmospheric friction resulting from a non-vertical launch angle - needed for anything except sounding charges - pretty much guarantees you'd never hit orbital velocities this way.

        OTOH a suitable supergun and a small impulse engine (rocket) might work wonders.

  9. annodomini2
    Boffin

    Cheap fuel on orbit

    May be the key to kick starting the commercialisation of space.

    There are lots of old satellites in parking orbits, now they may not be able to refuel them as:

    A: They weren't designed for it.

    B: Their systems are probably dead.

    However they do possess a lot of processed materials that have the potential to be recycled, this is currently not cost effective due to launch costs, I.e. it's cheaper to put a new unit it up, than trying to recover old units.

    But... If fuel was available relatively cheaply for recovery machines to move them to a location (on orbit) where the materials could be reused the capability to create on orbit systems may start to appear.

    Given current launch costs this could potentially be quite lucrative.

    I realise this is very idealistic, but at the same time if there is no dreaming then we will never get there.

    The main issue I forsee is that existing satellites use hydrazine for thruster fuel, making hydrazine on orbit may be a challenge and that units intended for refuelling may need technology updates beyond the refuelling mechanisms.

  10. neomancer
    Coat

    Shiny!

    - mines the brown one...

    1. Graham Dawson Silver badge
      Coat

      Re: Shiny!

      You can't take this guy from me...

      What?

  11. Dr_N
    FAIL

    God, I hate it when they name projects after SciFi characters/contraptions

    It's lame.

    1. Anonymous Custard
      Headmaster

      Re: God, I hate it when they name projects after SciFi characters/contraptions

      Almost as much as when people make comments like that without reading the article itself, especially when it clearly states that's precisely what they didn't do.

      1. Dr_N

        Re: God, I hate it when they name projects after SciFi characters/contraptions

        That kinda denial is a standard line to avoid copyright infringement from the likes of Fox.....

        1. Frankee Llonnygog

          Re: God, I hate it when they name projects after SciFi characters/contraptions

          They could have called it "Butt-head astronomer".

  12. lee harvey osmond

    Go asteroid mining? Really?

    Yeah.

    And I'd like to be the king of all Londinium, and wear a shiny hat.

    1. Ben Holmes
      Happy

      Re: Go asteroid mining? Really?

      PLOT TWIST: Lee Harvey Osmond is actually Prince Charles.

  13. Shasta McNasty
    Thumb Up

    I love the idea even if it isn't going to happen.

    Taking 4 years to mine 68Kg of anything hardly seems cost effective. Unless asteroids contain some cool-as-fuck-ium element not found on Earth.

    1. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
      Happy

      I think it is called unobtanium (or was it narrativium?)

  14. Select * From Handle
    Happy

    If these FireFlys don't resemble Serenity.

    im not interested. :D

    1. NoneSuch Silver badge
      Happy

      Re: If these FireFlys don't resemble Serenity.

      As long as there is an image of Morena Baccarin down the side like an old US WW2 bomber I will support the program.

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I'm sure I've heard this somewhere before...

    Beware, I live!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Paris Hilton

      Re: I'm sure I've heard this somewhere before...

      You feel it's just a little sinister?

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    I'm going to treat them to a "Full English" at Milliways

    Seeing as how they claim to have cracked a few very hard problems, and to be commercialising it right next year, and in space too, they're surely on the guest list:

    http://www.oocities.org/hitch_hikers_guide_to_the_galaxy/episode5a.jpg

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    First steps

    Yes this is primitive but it's the way to go, if we want to get away from having to boost large amounts of finite resources into orbit the obvious answer is to use the one's already out there, and that means advanced robotics and manufacturing if only to avoid the nastier effects of space on humans.

    A Mars mission or a moon base becomes infinitely easier and risk free if any visiting astronauts or cosmonauts have ready built environments built with hopefully water, oxygen, communications and energy already in place.

    I can only hope this venture is a success or delivers enough benefits to progress the concept, the future exploitation of space depends on it, the one major downside though if it succeeds is that companies on Earth would adopt the technology in a heartbeat potentially making many manual jobs obsolete.

    1. Bilious
      Holmes

      Re: First steps

      Just a few trivial questions before I invest: Where does the energy for the smelting of ores come from? What is the plan for providing energy for feeding the 3D metalworks printer? What's the chemistry for extracting the oxidant for the fuels - and where does the energy come from? How about a pilot plant on Earth - just to demonstrate the technology?

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: First steps

        Why don't you ask the research team working on this? I just said it's a good idea, I wasn't making fatuous comments dismissing any idea just to look clever on the internet where nobody cares anyway.

        If they succeed we'll know about it if they don't human experience has been pushed a little further regarding the problems of working in and exploiting off world resources

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Alien

    I'll believe it when I see it

    I think that you can get these landers onto asteroids and extract the ores necessary, but I'm a bit skeptical that you can A) process those ores in space to the standards of purity needed for the self-replicating satellites to use and B) that you can get a good automated self-replicating satellite/probe/orbital factory up there with current technology that is available to get to orbit--in short I think that a working self-replicator would be too heavy.

  19. John70
    Joke

    Firefly, Dragonfly....

    Whats next, Horsefly, Housefly and an elephant fly...

    1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
      Happy

      Well given the severe funding and technology issues how about we call the first one the mayfly.

      1. ravenviz Silver badge

        @ John Smith

        Boom boom!

        /basilbrush

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      I've done seen about everrrrry-thing when I've seen an elephant fly!!

      Of course you'll need to get Disney to agree to let you use the rights....

    3. squigbobble
      Trollface

      FireFly leads...

      DragonFly lands...

      BotFly bores into the asteroid and can only be retrieved by duck-taping over the hole to force it to emerge.

  20. sisk

    How to profit

    Step 1) Mine asteroids.

    Step 2) Use raw materials to build structures in space

    Step 3) Sell seats on those obit built space ships.

    Step 4) If that doesn't work, have your robotic workers (programmed to be completely loyal to you, of course) to build an array of fracking big space guns pointed at all the world's major cities and hold the world for ransom for one trillion dollars. It is essential to raise your pinky finger to your lips and laugh maniacally after making your demand. It helps if you have a bald cat to.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: How to profit

      Major downside to that plan is your slick assistant with the eye patch reminding you that $1m is peanuts these days and that you make more from your legitimate operations

  21. Mystic Megabyte
    Stop

    Pyramid on Mars selling

    As I understand it, the bankers down here have already issued more IOUs than there is cash on the planet.

    Now they want to do the same thing in space.

    The new banking paradigm, "To infinity and beyond".

  22. arrbee

    Hmm, pretty sure Stephen Baxter was writing about using fireflies for asteroid mining 15-odd years ago ( never could decide whether those books were inspiring or depressing ).

  23. Richard Boyce
    Thumb Down

    Ion drives

    Presumably, these new spacecraft would have to use ion drives for propulsion. When that technology becomes sufficiently reliable, it'll be used by satellites. That will increase their effective lifetime, so they're unlikely to need to be topped up with propellant such as xenon. Plus, there's not a lot of xenon in space that you can mine.

    In any gold rush, it's usually those who sell the supplies who make the money. I think this is all about shouting "Gold!" and seeing who's got more money than sense.

    I don't think there will be sensible commercialisation of deep space until we have abundant energy from nuclear fusion.

    1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
      Boffin

      Re: Ion drives

      "When that technology becomes sufficiently reliable, it'll be used by satellites. "

      You're about 2 decades too late. the XIPS thrusters have been in service on various comm sats (originally made by Hughes, now IIRC Boeing) since the late 80s, so decade long operation has been demonstrated.

      However I agree that finding Xenon is likely to be difficult.

      1. Alan Brown Silver badge

        Re: Ion drives

        Xenon is used for convenience (heavy molecular weight). Iodine also works, as do a number of other substances.

        Water works too, but the molecular weight is extremely low. it'd really be a matter of finding what's readily extractable on asteroids and then designing suitable thrusters to use it.

        Asteroid mining is likely to be a _lot_ easier in some respects than on earth - oxdiation and metamorphic processes are unlikely to have taken place, making pure lumps somewhat more easy to obtain, but as others have pointed out in the pats, the moon or asteroids could have stacks of gold bars waiting for collection and it'd still be unecomonic to retrieve 'em with current technologies.

        (I can't see how a "firefly" as described will make the delta-V required to go visit an asteroid.)

  24. CmdrX3

    What can one say

    hahahahahahahahahahaha..................hahahahahahahahahahahahahah..............lol........guffaw.................hahahahahahahahahah.......... nuff said

  25. Filippo Silver badge

    Asteroid mining like cold fusion?

    I wonder if asteroid mining will turn out to be the next cold fusion. Investor bait.

    I mean, there's no fundamental reason for which asteroid mining shouldn't work and maybe eventually become profitable. And it's something which, if it worked efficiently, could be really rather awesome. I mean, *I* really want it to work, and I think it's worth at least looking into it. These are traits which were shared by cold fusion too, which mostly turned out to be scams.

  26. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Boffin

    Now *how* does one get from lumps of rock -> pure nickel particles?

    Only that's quite a leap from raw material to industrial feed stock.

    The classic SF solution is an industrial size mass spectrometer. IRL that will take 2 phase changes and the associated handling of solids, liquids and gases simultaneously, along with ionizing all the species. All are big energy consumers.

    Substantial work has been done on ISRU and processing of lunar materials by the Space Studies Institute (and others) but it's damm tricky.

    1. Chemist

      Re: Now *how* does one get from lumps of rock -> pure nickel particles?

      "All are big energy consumers."

      I don't think your big is anywhere nearly big enough

      Although I assume they are hoping to mine native nickel or nickel/iron from asteroids.

      1. John Smith 19 Gold badge

        Re: Now *how* does one get from lumps of rock -> pure nickel particles?

        "I don't think your big is anywhere nearly big enough"

        Well I did put it in bold. :)

        "Although I assume they are hoping to mine native nickel or nickel/iron from asteroids."

        My guess too. Somehow I doubt that "native" nickel/iron is quite as pure as they think it is.

        As a practical note for efficient heating I think you need to skip any kind of PV array and go with straight focused sunlight. At Earth orbit you're looking around 1350W m^2 and concentrator technology could be very very lightweight. But an open crucible would mean the contents would evaporate off fairly easily and a closed one needs some kind of clear high temperature cover

        But that's the obvious bit. I keep thinking something like centrifugal casting would be the obvious way to get broad spectrum material separation in space, but you need some kind of positive pressure to force it onto the spinning mold in the first place.

  27. MrXavia
    Trollface

    Patent Pending?

    Do patents apply to space?

    patents in one country don't apply to every country, so how could any patent be valid?

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